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What Killed Oulanyah

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JACOB OULANYAH’S MEDICAL HISTORY The ill-health of the late Speaker Jacob Oulanyah started in 2019 when he discovered a swelling in his neck. The swelling was removed in Germany, and he was told it was cancer.

He started treatment which he finished at the Uganda Cancer Institute.

On 23rd January, he was admitted to Mulago, where he was to stay for two weeks as we prepared him to travel.

His bone marrow wasn’t functional, and he had to be protected from infection, and that’s why visits were restricted.

Minister Jane Ruth Aceng: The immediate cause of death was multiple organ failure; heart, lungs, liver, and kidney failure.

He had multiple infections discovered both here and in Seattle.

SC Villa Head Coach FINED UGX2m

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SC VILLA HEAD COACH FINED UGX 2M
FUFA Competitions Disciplinary has fined Sc Villa Head coach Petros Koukouras UGX 2M for breaching Article 31(2) of the FUFA Competitions Rules.
During the Uganda Premier League match No. 138: Wakiso Giants FC V Sc Villa played on the 30.3.2022 at Kabaka Kyabaggu, Petros kicked a second ball in the field of play in persistent protest a conduct which is contrary to the rules and regulations and brings the game of football into disrepute. He also delayed to exit the field of play upon being shown marching orders. Petros incited the home team fans with his gestures and conduct as he exited the field of play which incited them into throwing objects and subsequently stoppage of the game.
Petros Koukouras is prohibited from taking part in any national football activities until payment of the fine. SC Villa is directed to ensure implementation of the Committee’s decision against Petros Koukouras

SC Villa Head Coach FINED UGX2m

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SC VILLA HEAD COACH FINED UGX 2M
FUFA Competitions Disciplinary has fined Sc Villa Head coach Petros Koukouras UGX 2M for breaching Article 31(2) of the FUFA Competitions Rules.
During the Uganda Premier League match No. 138: Wakiso Giants FC V Sc Villa played on the 30.3.2022 at Kabaka Kyabaggu, Petros kicked a second ball in the field of play in persistent protest a conduct which is contrary to the rules and regulations and brings the game of football into disrepute. He also delayed to exit the field of play upon being shown marching orders. Petros incited the home team fans with his gestures and conduct as he exited the field of play which incited them into throwing objects and subsequently stoppage of the game.
Petros Koukouras is prohibited from taking part in any national football activities until payment of the fine. SC Villa is directed to ensure implementation of the Committee’s decision against Petros Koukouras

Biden Yet to respond to petition challenging Museveni presence at US summit

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Yoweri Kaguta Museveni

Robert Menedez, a US Senate Committee chairperson petitioned US president Joe Biden to terminate an invitation for Ugandan tyrant Yoweri Museveni who is expected to attend the 2022 US-Africa Leaders Summit. In the petition, Menedez referred to the brutality unleashed on citizens by security forces acting on command of Gen. Museveni.

Also contained in his March 28 letter, Menedez wants Museveni’s son who commands the land forces in Uganda to be slapped with sanctions over his direct involvement in the torture of celebrated writer Kakwenza Rukirabashaija who fled to exile in Germany.

Menedez explains that Museveni’s 36 year rule has been characterised by mass killings, violence on dissenters, gross rights abuses of civilians and press and arbitrary arrests without trial for all those opposed to his dictatorship.

In his petitions, Menedez reflects on the 2020 November killing spree that left over 54 Ugandan civilians killed by security forces in the capital, Kampala. He also replicates that unaccounted November 2016 Kasese massacre that left over 100 women and children murdered by soldiers commanded by then Brig. Peter Elwelu.

In his petition, Menedez further challenges Museveni’s constant constitutional amendments that have enabled him take grip on the top seat. He adds that US should take action and cut aid funds to the notorious Kampala administration.

“Despite this troubling track record, Uganda remains one of the top recipients of US foreign aid and security assistance. While the US has issued statements and expressions of concern after human rights violations come to light, such statements are insufficient. Personal targeted sanctions would have greater impact,” appeals Menedez.

As of April 4, the Biden administration had not yet responded to the Menedez petition but sources say Museveni could face his worst in case he lays foot on US soil. Ugandans living in the US plan to lead peaceful demonstrations challenging the presence of dictator Museveni on US soil.

Acholi MPs Protest Budget for Burial of Oulanyah

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UPDATE 🚨
Acholi MPs have protested the cut down of the burial budget for the late Jacob Oulanyah and giving allowances to the National organizing committee.
The budget has been reduced from 1.8 billion shillings as approved by parliament to 1.2 billion shillings.

Oulanyah Body Received at Entebbe Airport

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“We have officially received the body of our departed brother. We receive it utmost sadness and grief.” Vice President @jessica_alupo

Rev Fr. Godfrey Loum, the Bishop of the Diocese of Northern Uganda leads a short prayer session before Rt Hon Oulanyah’s casket is handed over to A-Plus funeral service.

PICTORIAL 📸
Welcoming the Body of the late Speaker Jacob Oulanyah with “Bwola Dance” a Royal Dance among the Acholi people. This dance traditionally accompanied the Chief (Rwot) when heading for battle and upon his return. Sadly this battle was lost #RIPOulanyah

PICTORIAL 📸
The casket containing the remains of fallen former Speaker Jacob Oulanyah being loaded into a funeral service van after it arrived at Entebbe International Airport aboard Ethiopian Airlines plane on April 1, 2022.
📸 @bamulanzeki

The body of fallen former Speaker Jacob Oulanyah has arrived at his residence in Muyenga, Kampala ahead of the Sunday funeral service.

PICTORIAL 📸
The family of the late Jacob Oulanyah and top dignitaries led by the Vice-President @jessica_alupo, Speaker @AnitahAmong and Chief Justice Owiny-Dollo wait to receive the body of the Rt Hon Jacob Oulanyah at Entebbe international Airport #RIPOulanyah

PICTORIAL 📸
A select group of MPs – the males honouring @JacobOulanyah’s signature bow tie – are among the dignitaries at #Entebbe International Airport to receive the body of the late Speaker of @Parliament_Ug.

Owiny Dollo Apologizes to Kabaka

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CJ Owiny-Dollo apologizes to Kabaka.
“I made a wrong and inappropriate reference to His Majesty the Kabaka of Buganda. I hereby unequivocally, unreservedly and of my free volition, wholly retract that reference and also hereby tender my apology to His Majesty, the Kabaka. …”

Oulanyah’s Emergency Operation of 1990 Caused His Death – Mao

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Oulanyah

“I knew, of course that due to the beatings in Makerere of 1990, his spleen had to been cut out in an emergency operation at Mulago. Now when you don’t have a spleen, you are prone to multiple infections because those are some of the organs that deal with the germs that we all carry around. They cleanse the body and so on. And many of his internal organs had been traumatized as result of [cutting out his spleen due to] that beating on 10th December 1990

Hon Nobert Mao, the president general of the Democrtatic Party (DP) and close friend to fallen speaker Rt Hon Jacob Oulanyah, has said that Oulanyah’s beatings of 1990 caused his eventual death last weekend.
Mao was referring to Oulanyah’s university days when he led a student’s strike (with Mao) against the removal of student allowances by the new National Resistance Army (NRA) government in 1990.

Oulanyah was the leader of the strike as the guild speaker, together with Mao who was the guild president. During the army’s efforts to quell the strike, President Museveni’s army, only four years in power by then, shot two students dead and brutally beat several other students. As it turns out, one of the worst beaten was Jacob Oulanyah.

Oulanyah ended up being hospitalized at Mulago for several days. The injuries from the beatings were so severe that it was incumbent that he gets an emergency operation in which, according to Mao, his spleen was cut out
Mao said this, while giving one of the foremost seminal tributes to the fallen speaker on the Capital Gang on Saturday morning. He narrated what Oulanyah’s doctor told him and the team that went to Seattle to see the bedridden Oulanyah:

“The doctor told us that the medical team thought that they could possibly harvest cells from someone who is genetically related to Jacob, and then modify those cells in a lab and transplant them into Jacob to tackle the cancer cells. This is why Jacob was taken to that particular hospital. Many patients have undergone that kind of treatment there and recovered.

“However, the doctor told us that unfortunately, Jacob’s illness is (sic) so advanced and his organs are (sic) in no position to take the kind of treatment regime that would revive him. And I have to let you know that many of us didn’t know the details of Jacob’s illness.

“And I am a person who believes that I should talk about what I know. Even as a very close friend, I actually never heard from Jacob telling me that he had cancer.

“I knew, of course that due to the beatings in Makerere of 1990, his spleen had to been cut out in an emergency operation at Mulago. Now when you don’t have a spleen, you are prone to multiple infections because those are some of the organs that deal with the germs that we all carry around. They cleanse the body and so on. And many of his internal organs had been traumatized as result of [cutting out his spleen due to] that beating on 10th December 1990.”

Farewell, a Thinker with Sense of Originality

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Farewell, a thinker with a sense of originality and a level headed gentleman – Jacob Oulanyah!

By Odrek Rwabwogo

It was early October 1990 and we had just picked our brown envelopes having checked our names on the noticeboards at the main building where they were printed with a stencil and typewriter. For some of us from rural schools with limited educational facilities, we had finally made it to Makerere University.

The crowding and craning around the noticeboards was intense; many of us strangers trying to see if
there was anyone from one’s area or former school and if they were residents or nonresidents.

The milling around the hall filled us with a measure of excitement as well as curiosity for we wanted to know what portended for us in this ‘wider world’ given it had been our first step out of our villages. The air was filled with a taste of bitter rivalry between two-contending university factions in previously concluded guild elections that pitted two candidates, Nobert Mao who had emerged winner and the
late Noble Mayombo, who had lost by a narrow margin.

The aftermath of the race seemed to signify a dying era of UPC symbolisms and an incoming, not yet well
understood NRM. In many ways, the race was a sign of the times, bringing up underlying but unmistakable fears, largely stereotypical, that divided the country at the time.

One of these was that for the first time an army officer hailing from Kabarole district and a refractory student leader from Gulu had locked horns over leadership. The language alone was divisive. For many of us, one camp represented the new order of ‘no party politics’ and the other a temporarily dying one, of ‘multiparty politics’.

Mao had allied with another candidate called Charles Vvuba in what Mayombo termed an alliance only comparable in terms and proportion to the 1962 UPC/KY alliance, to defeat Benedict Kiwanuka. It is a strange irony that Mao would some twenty years
later, lead the Democratic Party (DP).

In a few days of my joining university, curiosity and the love of debates got the better part of me. I went to the main hall one evening and watched a Guild Representative Council (GRC) in session for the first time. And there, even I who was warming up to
the villain camp of Mayombo, was struck by this young, tall, dark orator who when he took to the floor, spoke as if his nose was a little pressed for air and he had a rhythmic flow of words that one would simply want to listen more.

It was Jacob Oulanyah. He had a developed command of oratory for his age and even though as speaker of GRC, he needed to show impartiality, he would mercilessly cut the other side to size to make
a point. It is partly this grandiloquence that drove students into the strike of December 10, 1990 over the scrapping of student allowances.

Police shot at us and killed the two Thomases Okema and Onyango. In opposition to this strike, our side mobilized students to sing and match in the night through freedom square protesting the strike
and denouncing strike leaders and asking students to go back to class.

Police fired at us again in the night and near the old social science building, I fell headlong into a large ditch left off an unfinished construction site and broke my back. I would lie in bed for days.

Fate really has a sense of irony. Both Noble and Jacob on two extreme sides of student politics would end up on one side of the political spectrum some sixteen years later. Jacob joined the Movement after his loss in the 2006 Omoro constituency MP race in
which he had held the banner of a now severely reduced UPC while, sadly, Noble died in May 2007 without seeing how this had turned out that in May 2011, one of his protagonists in the 1989 race, Jacob would be the deputy speaker of parliament on
an NRM ticket and ten years later, speaker of Uganda’s 11th parliament.

I suppose in death, these two men have met not as protagonists but rather as rekindled souls of
smart, insightful, discerning and consensus builders of their generation on earth. I suppose too they have embraced, giving us a strong signal to always work and govern from the middle in order to accommodate each other.

No extremes are sustainable in life and in public matters. Extremists never build anything. I got to know Jacob better when he married a fiery friend of mine, a colleague minister in the guild government, the late Dorothy Nangwale, herself of the UPC stock (her father, Eng. Abner Nangwale had been minister of works in Obote II Government).

Dorothy was a keen slash and burn, no holds-barred debater too, a human rights activist and a leader in the National student Movement. We were both elected in Mbale in September 1993 to lead the student organization and to work on setting up the
Uganda National Youth Councils.

I wasn’t surprised Jacob ended up with Dorothy as
a couple. They both had an independent streak, they were often decidedly anti authority and rebellious, challenging status quo; they were intellectually excellent to spar on any issue and they were firmly confident in their views.

They were a couple destined for greatness in every way in their country. Dorothy once came to church
one Sunday morning a few years before her death. Holding her baby in arms, she took to the microphone and asked the preacher of the day, whether it was right to “obey government rulers as written in Romans chapter 13 especially if that government was undermining the rights of its citizens”.

Dorothy was confident we would take no offense and that we would challenge her position both spiritually and intellectually given we had background with the couple as my friends for a long time. Two things the country will miss about Jacob, things that will stand out as probably his legacy for the young people.

In the 2016 speakership race in which he calmly
ceded ground for his opponent before the elders of the party, I came to see him. He was deeply troubled by the talk that he was ‘less NRM simply because he had had a UPC background’.

He told me, “When I make a decision, I have very well considered all aspects of an issue, calmly and maturely. When I left UPC, I didn’t leave any part
of me. I left wholeheartedly and completely and I had no intention of going into any other party.

I had seen the internal UPC fights decimate a party that had built a record and I noticed how so fundamental it was to rally behind a strong, smart, firm, intellectually superior African leader, Yoweri Museveni, whose devotion to Uganda and
Africa is unmatchable”.

The lesson here is twofold – that those who claim to be the best NRM pedigree simply because of the accident of history or position, are really often the demobilizers for the Movement whether they know it or not. If we had missed Jacob even for the short time we had him, simply because he came into the
party late, would Uganda not have missed the contribution of this illustrious son?

The other embedded lesson is that it doesn’t matter when people come. It only matters that they come anyway and come with no preconditions. When they do, they are replenishing the ranks of our leadership if they are good.

They bring fresh experience that the party might not have. We must always welcome them with open arms and try their skills and not hold them against their past. The second thing we will miss is his fight to level on ideas not pettiness.

In the 2021 race, he worried much about the shallow campaign that had more talk ‘about money and less enriching’ on what candidates wanted to do. In a country where politics has been monetized, it is always refreshing to hear someone begin their race with what they want to change not how much they plan to spend. We will miss this original thinker and level headed gentleman of our generation.
God keep his soul in eternal peace

Museveni Reshuffles RDCs

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LIRA CITY RCC RETAINS HIS POSITION AS PRESIDENT RESHUFFLES RCCS
President Museveni has announced a reshuffle among Resident District Commissioners, Resident City Commissioners and their deputies.

According to the new list released on Wednesday, the Kampala RCC, Hudu Hussein has been moved to Yumbe and replaced by Amina Lukanga.

The controversial Hudu Hussein recently came out to deny one f the statements in which he had given preachers 30 days to vacate Kampala streets.

“My President is a very religious and God-fearing man, and he is my inspiration. I cannot do something that he himself cannot do. I emphasize that I cannot and did not say anything about chasing street preachers. I referred to street children, among other issues,”Hudu Hussein said in a statement later.

Today’s changes have also seen Phoebe Namulindwa moved from Luweero to Kassanda whereas Kigozi Ssempala has been moved from Kayunga to Mpigi and replaced by Hajji Nsereko Mutumba who recently was serving as the spokesperson for the Uganda Muslim Supreme Council headquarters at Old Kampala.

The changes have also seen Mariam Nalubega Sseguya who has been in Kawempe sent to Kiboga whereas former MP Saleh Kamba has been appointed as the new Jinja City Resident City Commissioner.

In the latest reshuffle, Kyeyune Ssenyonjo has been moved from Pallisa to Nabilatuk in Karamoja region and has been replaced by Majid Dhikusooka.

Among those who have retained their positions is Justine Mbabazi for Wakiso, Anderson Burora for Lubaga and former journalist Ahmed Kateregga Musaazi who is still serving as deputy RCC for Masaka City.

The new changes according to the president take immediate effect.

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